English [en], .pdf, 🚀/lgli/lgrs/zlib, 9.6MB, 📘 Book (non-fiction), lgrsnf/Economic Rationality (What is Political Economy).pdf
Economic Rationality (What is Political Economy?) 🔍
Polity Press, 1, 2022
Stephen G. Engelmann 🔍
description
Economics used to be called political economy, and the loss of the ‘political’ tracks the ascendance of the idea of rational choice within the discipline. Where does this idea of economic rationality—choosing to maximize benefits and minimize costs—come from? What are the consequences of its rise? In this new book, Stephen Engelmann assesses these questions through a consideration of the often-hidden links between choice and government, ranging from the Benthamic utilitarianism that inspired modern economics to the contemporary economic psychologists trying to nudge everyone to choose more rationally. Multiple global crises are exposing how terribly deficient economic rationality is as a mode of government, since choice turns away from relations in the common out toward systems management and in toward better housekeeping. What once heralded a politics and ethics of egalitarian self-command and spurred democratic reform, he argues, now forecloses creative political-economic alternatives and legitimates otherwise illegitimate forms of rule. This accessible volume will be of interest to students and scholars of politics and economics, and to general readers concerned about the various ways that psychology and management have infiltrated our politics.
Alternative filename
lgli/Economic Rationality (What is Political Economy).pdf
Alternative edition
What is political economy? (Polity Press), Cambridge, 2022
Alternative edition
United Kingdom and Ireland, United Kingdom
Alternative edition
John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Cambridge, 2022
Alternative description
"Economics used to be called political economy, and the loss of the "political" tracks the ascendance of the idea of rational choice within the discipline. Where does this idea of economic rationality - choosing to maximize benefits and minimize costs - come from? What are the consequences of its rise? In this new book, Stephen Engelmann assesses these questions through a consideration of the often-hidden links between choice and government, ranging from the Benthamic utilitarianism that inspired modern economics to the contemporary economic psychologists trying to nudge everyone to choose more rationally. Multiple global crises are exposing how deficient economic rationality is as a political theory, since a focus on choice turns actors away from relations in the common. Political economy once targeted aristocratic rule - heralding a politics and ethics of egalitarian self-command and spurring democratic reform - but economics allows domination and forecloses alternatives to it. This accessible volume will be of interest to students and scholars of politics and economics, and to general readers concerned about the various ways that psychology and management have infiltrated our politics"--Amazon.com
Alternative description
Cover
Title page
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction
2 Textbook Rationality and the Behavioral Critique
Choice, scarcity, and economic reason
Economic rationality and economic science
Allocative choice and the behavioral challenge
Rationality, management, and politics
3 Political Economy
Reading Adam Smith
From Malthus to Mill
On interest: Back to Bentham
4 Economics as Politics
Choice and balance
Pleasures, pains, and commensurability
Economics and expertise
Governing interest
5 Conclusion
Notes
1 Introduction
2 Textbook Rationality and the Behavioral Critique
3 Political Economy
4 Economics as Politics
5 Conclusion
Index
EULA
date open sourced
2024-02-08
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